You are reading

Many Undocumented Workers May Struggle to Tap Into Excluded Workers Fund

U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer, State Sen. Jessica Ramos and Assembly Member Carmen De La Rosa rallied outside an IRS office building in LeFrak City Friday (Sen. Jessica Ramos via Twitter)

May 3, 2021 By Allie Griffin

A number of undocumented workers who were unemployed during the pandemic face obstacles in tapping into a $2.1 billion state fund that was recently established to help them.

Many lack a tax identification number that is issued by the IRS — which is one way they can prove eligibility for the fund. The IRS, however, has been slow to issue such IDs due to a backlog in their system, according to area officials.

Several New York legislators are concerned that the backlog will hurt undocumented workers and are calling on the IRS to speed up the process.

U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer, State Sen. Jessica Ramos and Assembly Member Carmen De La Rosa rallied outside an IRS office building in LeFrak City Friday to demand the agency clear the backlog so immigrants can take advantage of the state’s Excluded Workers Fund that is about to be launched.

The $2.1 billion fund will provide payments of up to $15,600 to undocumented New Yorkers who lost their jobs during the pandemic and didn’t qualify for federal aid. Undocumented immigrants have been ineligible to receive financial support from federal relief programs — like unemployment insurance and stimulus checks — due to their immigration status.

An estimated 290,000 undocumented workers across the state are expected to benefit from this relief, including 213,000 individuals in New York City alone.

There are 58,000 Queens residents who will be eligible to receive funds once applications for the program open, according to Fiscal Policy Institute.

The fund requires applicants to prove they’ve paid taxes in at least one of the last three reporting years. One way applicants can prove this is with an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN), which the IRS provides to undocumented immigrants and others who don’t have a social security number to file taxes.

The legislators said there is a nationwide backlog of 74,000 applicants — including an estimated 4,000 in New York — for an ITIN at the IRS.

Schumer, Ramos and De La Rosa also penned a letter to IRS Commissioner, Charles Rettig, to demand the agency expedite the processing of the applications so that such New Yorkers can get financial relief as soon as possible.

“In order to ensure that the maximum amount of workers can benefit from the Excluded Workers Fund, it is imperative that the IRS prioritize its resources to work expeditiously through this ITIN application backlog,” they wrote.

The ITIN applications are currently taking upwards of 17 weeks to process, according to the National Immigration Law Center.

The lawmakers are demanding that the IRS expand the number of its Taxpayer Assistance Centers—which assist workers with the ITIN application—in the city and increase the working hours of the centers.

They also requested the IRS dedicate more staff and resources to tackling the backlog.

“We passed historic relief in New York for these excluded workers,” Ramos said at the rally. “Now we need to make sure they can access these programs by expediting the ITIN process.”

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Port Authority awards record $2.3 Billion in contracts to MWBEs in JFK Airport transformation

The Port Authority announced on Monday a historic milestone in the ongoing $19 billion transformation of JFK International Airport, where a record $2.3 billion in contracts have been awarded to Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises (MWBE).

The JFK redevelopment also demonstrates a significant focus on working with local contractors, awarding more than $950 million in contracts to Queens-based businesses to date.

Op-Ed | Hochul: Action is Imperative on Shoplifting, but Violent Crime is Just Fine

Apr. 29, 2024 By Council Member James F. Gennaro

Negotiations regarding the New York State budget have just concluded a few days ago and a budget has passed after more than two weeks of delays. But while Gov. Kathy Hochul has proclaimed this year’s ‘bold agenda’ aims to make New York ‘safer,’ there hasn’t been so much as a whisper about the safety issue New Yorkers actually care about – New York States’s dangerous bail reform laws and the State’s absence of a ‘dangerousness standard,’ which would allow judges to detain without bail those defendants that pose a present a clear and present danger to our communities. (The 49 other states and the federal government have a dangerousness standard. NY State is the only state that lacks this essential protection from the State’s most dangerous offenders.)